000
FXUS63 KFSD 140904
AFDFSD
Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service Sioux Falls SD
404 AM CDT Wed Mar 14 2018
.SHORT TERM...(Today and Tonight)
Issued at 403 AM CDT Wed Mar 14 2018
Happy Pi Day! Mild day to start this forecast off. A little
concerned about effects of lingering snow cover in southwest
Minnesota on highs for today, so have pulled the forecast back a
few degrees from previous in this area. Did not cool too much,
though, given a westerly wind direction (generally more favorable
for mixing), shifting more to the north by late afternoon as a
subtle front slides into the area. Otherwise looks like a very
pleasant day, with highs from around 40 degrees north to near 60
or a little higher in far southern parts of our forecast area.
Some increase in clouds and a light breeze should keep temperatures
in check tonight, with lows from the upper teens to mid 20s.
.LONG TERM...(Thursday through Tuesday)
Issued at 403 AM CDT Wed Mar 14 2018
Focus through the mid to long range portion of the forecast will be
on strong wave lifting into the Northern Plains late Thursday night
and Friday. Unfortunately, not seeing a lot of agreement on the
placement of key features with this system, leading to a high degree
of uncertainty with regard to precipitation location and type. GFS
and Canadian model have trended northward with the upper wave and
associated surface low, bringing the system into central to northern
Nebraska by midday Friday. Meanwhile the ECMWF and NAM both maintain
a more southern track with the low through northeast Kansas, held to
the south by a stronger surface high over Minnesota.
While the latter solution is preferred by both WPC and this office,
enough uncertainty among these deterministic models, and among the
GFS/EC ensembles, that we opted to not deviate from the broader
model consensus blend too far at this time. The main difference in
the various solutions is how far to the northeast precipitation will
be able to spread Friday/Friday evening, before the wave shears off
to the east late Friday night. Trimmed back northeast extent of the
higher pops a bit through Friday morning, but no other significant
changes were made from the blend.
Regardless of where the wave eventually tracks, a layer of warm air
aloft and/or lack of ice aloft will lead to a potential for mixed
precipitation types, with some icing possible along with generally
light snowfall amounts. Caveat on that latter statement would be
that both the GFS and NAM indicate a period of robust lift in the
dendritic layer along a narrow band of mid-level frontogenesis on
Friday, albeit in different locations and within differing thermal
profiles. Will certainly be something to monitor in later model runs.
At this time, not seeing a high enough potential for ice or snowfall
accumulations that would reach warning levels to warrant issuance of
any headlines just yet. However, as models converge on a more common
solution, if thermal profiles remain similar, will likely need at
least advisories for part of the area on Friday. For now, will
highlight the potential for mixed precip types impacting Friday
travel in the HWO and on our social media platforms, while also
emphasizing the uncertainty.
Greatest consensus shows the wave exiting the area by 12Z Saturday,
with only the Canadian lingering a chance for precipitation across
southwest Minnesota into the daytime hours Saturday. Temperatures
through the weekend and into early next week look to remain on the
cool side of normal. Upper ridging Saturday/Sunday will attempt to
keep daytime readings within a couple degrees of normal, with highs
in the upper 30s and 40s, though this will depend on the extent of
any snowfall with the system on Friday. Another trough swings across
the region early next week, and while details are still sketchy, all
14/00Z models hint at an unsettled pattern for Monday into Tuesday.
&&
.AVIATION...(For the 06Z TAFS through 06Z Wednesday night)
Issued at 1029 PM CDT Tue Mar 13 2018
There will be a period of low level wind shear at KSUX early
Wednesday morning, otherwise, VFR conditions are expected across
the area through the TAF period.
&&
.FSD WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
SD...None.
MN...None.
IA...None.
NE...None.
&&
$$
SHORT TERM...JH
LONG TERM...JH
AVIATION...JM